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America, Empire of Liberty: A New History Hardcover – 19 Jan 2009

4.7 out of 5 stars 26 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 704 pages
  • Publisher: Allen Lane; First Edition edition (19 Jan. 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1846140560
  • ISBN-13: 978-1846140563
  • Product Dimensions: 16.2 x 4.6 x 24 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 512,229 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

David Reynolds probably knows more about America than any other British writer -- Sunday Times, Max Hastings

the most outstanding popular history of America written by a non-American ... Reynolds tells the ups and downs of this great narrative with tremendous verve and imagination
-- Irish Times, Richard Aldous

Review

the most outstanding popular history of America written by a non-American ... Reynolds tells the ups and downs of this great narrative with tremendous verve and imagination

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Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Paperback
Despite being billed as the best one-volume history of the United States in recent times, "America: Empire of Liberty" is a remarkably uneven book. Reynolds starts off well with a reminder of pre-1492 Native Americans achievements and a caustic look at the Columbus myth. The standard remains pretty high right on through his coverage of the colonial period, the war of liberation, the contradictions and correspondences between slavery and liberty, and on right up until the civil war. Up till that point it is a readable, succinct account of the United States history.

Then things start to level off, Reconstruction isn't dealt with particularly well in my opinion, but perhaps I was spoiled by recently reading Eric Foners masterpiece Reconstruction. On to the Spanish-American War; Reynolds rightly acknowledges it was a war with the Spanish then the Cubans and Filipinos, though he seems to portray the conflict in the Philippines as one between equivalents ("atrocities mounted on both sides") despite acknowledging in the text that while 4,000 US troops died the death toll for Filipinos was around a quarter of a million.

On to the twentieth century: Reynolds exhibits satisfaction that the United States was never sullied by a large socialist party, but plays down the level of repression focused on the generality of leftists in America that peaked during the Red Scare after WW1 and reached a crescendo post WW2 with McCarthyism (so-called: in reality it went far deeper than Joseph McCarthy, see Ellen Schreckers
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Format: Hardcover
David Reynolds has written a fantastic book that is both comprehensive in its coverage and intimate in its biographical details of the major players and defining events in American history. It provides an extraordinatry insight into the dynamics that have shaped America from the dichotomy of an anti-empire founded on the 'will to be free' that offered liberty and freedom on a scale unmatched by Europe, that founded its prosperity on the labour of black slaves, to the debates that shape modern America, as it does what it has always done - defining its identity as its perpetual struggle against all enemies foreign and domestic, real or imagined.

This is a well-written, thoroughly enjoyable book that provides a new insight into the world's self-styled only super-power. If you don't believe me check out the Radio 4 series Reynolds has done based on this book.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
I had hear excerpts from David Reynold's "Empire of Liberty" read on BBC Radio 4 - who serialised this book. I had encountered David Reynolds on BBC TV - for example his excellent series on world summit meetings.
I have always been interested in the history of the USA too but mainly through watching TV documentaries. In about 600 pages - David takes you through the last 400 or so years of american history at quite a pace. Key characters are fleshed out well. He has an eye for a telling quotation from those there at the time. Though quite a long book the pace is quick - the second world war only lasted less that 4 years for the USA so in a few pages we are into the cold war. Some may not like the considerable space devoted to social history as against political or economic history - but that comes down to personal interests of the reader. But no this is the Bizz!
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Format: Paperback
This is one of the best single-volume histories of America I've ever read. Whilst it does have to sometimes skim over certain topics or eras in the interests of brevity, it doesn't leave out anything important, and the relative shortness of the text gives the benefit of a broad overview, particularly in terms of the persistent characteristic of having an enemy to fight and draw the country together - first it was the British, then the Native Americans, then the Spanish in Mexico, Nazi Germany, the Cold War and now Islamic fundamentalists.

Reynolds draws on three major themes that have defined America over the years - empire, liberty and faith - and shows how these have intertwined over the years to make America the country it is. These themes highlight more than any other the contradictions at the heart of America - "the empire forged by anti-imperialists, the land of liberty than rested on slavery, the secular state energized by godly ambition".
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
This is a great, well-balanced single-volume history of the US, explaining the factors behind the growth of this nation from day 1.

Rather than simply 'tell the story', (to his credit) Reynolds spices things up by including quotations from memoirs, autobiographies etc. of the figures discussed to give a more complete image of the political climate at any given time. The pace at which events are covered prevents you from getting bogged down in issues that don't interest you, but provide enough information for you to appreciate the relevance of these issues, and are frequently inspirations for further reading.

He also has a unique way of introducing important people or legal cases. Instead of giving a blow by blow account of Abraham Lincoln's life, for example, Reynolds mentions a few of the most well-known elements of his life before actually introducing him, inviting the reader to take an educated guess as to who is being described. Although not totally relevant to the success of the whole book, this was an element of the written style I loved tremendously.

I would thoroughly recommend this book to anyone interested in learning more about America, and I would urge anyone studying the Civil Rights in the USA unit for A level history to read this before sitting the exam: it's a great way of uncovering themes that the textbooks don't mention that are relevant to the subject area (eg. expansion of Federal Government power over time).

10/10. So good, I could read it twice.
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